Notices
Engineers & Technicians Aeronautical engineering and aircraft MX

Flow agreements?

Old 03-29-2020, 09:24 PM
  #1  
Banned
Thread Starter
 
Joined APC: Jan 2015
Posts: 516
Default Flow agreements?

This is probably a question for better times. Why are pilots the only ones that have flow agreements?
kevbo is offline  
Old 04-01-2020, 12:25 PM
  #2  
Prime Minister/Moderator
 
rickair7777's Avatar
 
Joined APC: Jan 2006
Position: Engines Turn Or People Swim
Posts: 39,206
Default

From what to what?

Industries which have a minor league/JV and a major equivalent are few, and other industries often prefer to grow their own, starting young.

Baseball and oil come to mind, but they can more readily hire based on performance. Airlines have few performance datapoints because you basically have to screw up bad and get caught to even have a datapoint... an interviewer can't tell which candidate is so diligent that he never did an asap, vs. the asap frequent flyer who lets the SMS system cushion his slack (which is why majors fall back on entry-level checkride failures, HS GPA, etc cuz they got nothing better).

For most white-collar industries it's easier to predict success based on school performance and it's easy to fire someone who doesn't live up to expectations (or slacks off once the family obligations and burnout mounts).

Remember flow is only a carrot to staff the entry-level, they wouldn't do it unless they had to (or mainline union demanded it).
rickair7777 is offline  
Old 04-02-2020, 09:26 AM
  #3  
Banned
Thread Starter
 
Joined APC: Jan 2015
Posts: 516
Default

I guess it was a carrot offered from our masters rather than something the salves demanded. I figured {wrongly} that pilots would want a more secure career path before spending all that time and money. Most pilots were rich kids so easy come easy go.
kevbo is offline  
Old 08-23-2020, 03:37 PM
  #4  
The Fallen Cherub
 
Lucifer's Avatar
 
Joined APC: Aug 2020
Position: Wings & Prayer
Posts: 143
Default

The word Apprentice comes to mind.

Medical Doctors do their Internship.

The concept is not that unheard of.
Lucifer is offline  
Old 08-23-2020, 03:54 PM
  #5  
Gets Weekends Off
 
Joined APC: Jan 2019
Posts: 1,130
Default

It’s simply a tool to artificially lower wages to mitigate other wages which artificially higher than market would supply in other industries not unionized and are subjected to outsourcing.
captive apple is offline  
Old 08-23-2020, 05:45 PM
  #6  
Perennial Reserve
 
Excargodog's Avatar
 
Joined APC: Jan 2018
Posts: 11,478
Default

Originally Posted by kevbo View Post
This is probably a question for better times. Why are pilots the only ones that have flow agreements?
Regional airline management gets cheap labor by luring in gullible pilots by promising something they may or may not be able to deliver.

Most of their other job applicants simply aren’t that gullible.

see also, Shiny Jet Syndrome.
Excargodog is offline  
Old 10-30-2021, 06:08 PM
  #7  
"Yinzer an'at"
 
Allegheny's Avatar
 
Joined APC: Jun 2012
Position: Sittin at the puter
Posts: 186
Default

Originally Posted by captive apple View Post
It’s simply a tool to artificially lower wages to mitigate other wages which artificially higher than market would supply in other industries not unionized and are subjected to outsourcing.
This is correct. The "flow concept", which was not really supported by APA and not negotiated by any union, came about because Doug Parker wanted to guarantee that he had a ready supply of pilots. The carrot, was to dangle a mainline job in-front of prospective regional pilots. One critical consideration to understand is that the flow arrangement is not contractual. APA cannot negotiate for someone outside their own group, nor can ALPA negotiate for someone who hasn't been hired by one of the "wholly owned", yet. So there is no contractual obligation on the part of the company but there is a commitment from the company to honor the published conditions of their flow program.

Consider however that conditions can change. COVID is a good example. I could see Doug Parker modifying or scrapping the program any time it no longer suits the corporate interest. There are repercussions in people leaving for greener fields but management works for shareholders not for pilots.

The flow concept was designed to hold down costs at Eagle. If you have a guaranteed seat at AA then the program was designed so that would be unlikely to strike or go to some other carrier. Conditions of the flow specify an acceptable attendance standard, checkride and operational standard and no significant contractual discipline problems. If an Eagle wholly owned seeks too much in contract talks, then the company farms your work to Mesa or someone else who is not part of the flow program. The company is not contractually bound to flow x number of pilots so if Piedmont or Envoy asks for too much in contract talks, the flow from that company will just stop.

The company wants the flow program as long as the industry is losing people, and AA will lose a lot of pilots over the next decade. It keeps the costs down by holding out a complete career path to the prospective pilot. If you are one of the lucky ones and everything works, you would interview once at Envoy or Piedmont or PSA, and retire in the left seat of a 777, (or whatever they have in 35 years). If it doesn't work because of an industry upset or terrorist attack like 9/11, or another virus like COVID, then you will have the career that many airline pilots of the last 35 years have had. A lot of uncertainty and possible furlough or even see your company dissolve like Pan Am, Eastern and TWA.

There are no guarantees in this industry. As long as it is working, it is a reasonably good program. The retirement numbers at AA are pretty large which should keep the line moving.
Allegheny is offline  
Old 11-01-2021, 12:43 PM
  #8  
In a land of unicorns
 
Joined APC: Apr 2014
Position: Whale FO
Posts: 6,453
Default

Originally Posted by Allegheny View Post
This is correct. The "flow concept", which was not really supported by APA and not negotiated by any union, came about because Doug Parker wanted to guarantee that he had a ready supply of pilots. The carrot, was to dangle a mainline job in-front of prospective regional pilots. One critical consideration to understand is that the flow arrangement is not contractual. APA cannot negotiate for someone outside their own group, nor can ALPA negotiate for someone who hasn't been hired by one of the "wholly owned", yet. So there is no contractual obligation on the part of the company but there is a commitment from the company to honor the published conditions of their flow program.

Consider however that conditions can change. COVID is a good example. I could see Doug Parker modifying or scrapping the program any time it no longer suits the corporate interest. There are repercussions in people leaving for greener fields but management works for shareholders not for pilots.

The flow concept was designed to hold down costs at Eagle. If you have a guaranteed seat at AA then the program was designed so that would be unlikely to strike or go to some other carrier. Conditions of the flow specify an acceptable attendance standard, checkride and operational standard and no significant contractual discipline problems. If an Eagle wholly owned seeks too much in contract talks, then the company farms your work to Mesa or someone else who is not part of the flow program. The company is not contractually bound to flow x number of pilots so if Piedmont or Envoy asks for too much in contract talks, the flow from that company will just stop.

The company wants the flow program as long as the industry is losing people, and AA will lose a lot of pilots over the next decade. It keeps the costs down by holding out a complete career path to the prospective pilot. If you are one of the lucky ones and everything works, you would interview once at Envoy or Piedmont or PSA, and retire in the left seat of a 777, (or whatever they have in 35 years). If it doesn't work because of an industry upset or terrorist attack like 9/11, or another virus like COVID, then you will have the career that many airline pilots of the last 35 years have had. A lot of uncertainty and possible furlough or even see your company dissolve like Pan Am, Eastern and TWA.

There are no guarantees in this industry. As long as it is working, it is a reasonably good program. The retirement numbers at AA are pretty large which should keep the line moving.
Doug Parker wanted to guarantee a supply to AA regionals, way before he was working for AA? That's an interesting concept.
dera is offline  
Old 11-02-2021, 12:52 PM
  #9  
"Yinzer an'at"
 
Allegheny's Avatar
 
Joined APC: Jun 2012
Position: Sittin at the puter
Posts: 186
Default

Originally Posted by dera View Post
Doug Parker wanted to guarantee a supply to AA regionals, way before he was working for AA? That's an interesting concept.
It's true. I did union work at US Airways and he started the idea of the program there and planned on transferring it to AA. The company doesn't need a union's permission to hire people. Who the company hires and under what conditions are at the company's discretion. There was no concessionary ask to USAPA or to APA, there was also no incentive given either union, at least at the start. He didn't need their permission to try this program out. I have been retired for a while and the pilot supply problem will probably require modification of the program, however it is being run now, but it was in fact designed as a labor cost saving program by attempting to keep people at the wholly owned because they would have a guaranteed career path to the mainline.
Allegheny is offline  
Old 11-02-2021, 06:14 PM
  #10  
In a land of unicorns
 
Joined APC: Apr 2014
Position: Whale FO
Posts: 6,453
Default

Originally Posted by Allegheny View Post
It's true. I did union work at US Airways and he started the idea of the program there and planned on transferring it to AA. The company doesn't need a union's permission to hire people. Who the company hires and under what conditions are at the company's discretion. There was no concessionary ask to USAPA or to APA, there was also no incentive given either union, at least at the start. He didn't need their permission to try this program out. I have been retired for a while and the pilot supply problem will probably require modification of the program, however it is being run now, but it was in fact designed as a labor cost saving program by attempting to keep people at the wholly owned because they would have a guaranteed career path to the mainline.
Eagle had flow before the merger. It was not a Doug Parker idea.
dera is offline  
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
fenix1
Envoy Airlines
53
10-14-2018 07:05 AM
Making it Count
PSA Airlines
49
07-31-2018 04:55 PM
Skyhawk121
Envoy Airlines
134
05-10-2018 09:55 AM
Skyler02
Regional
9
12-29-2014 02:00 PM
FlyerJosh
Regional
7
08-02-2007 10:30 AM

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Thread Tools
Search this Thread
Your Privacy Choices